(navigation image)
Home American Libraries | Canadian Libraries | Universal Library | Community Texts | Project Gutenberg | Biodiversity Heritage Library | Children's Library | Additional Collections
Search: Advanced Search
Anonymous User (login or join us) Upload

View the book

[item image]

(~136 pg)Read Online
(5.1 M)PDF
(4.1 M)B/W PDF
(264.7 K)EPUB
(~136 pg)Kindle
(~136 pg)Daisy
(155.7 K)Full Text
(2.3 M)DjVu


All Files: HTTP

Help reading texts

Resources

Bookmark

England's financial supremacy; a translation of "Die englische Finanzvormacht: England's falsche Rechnung: Deutschland und die Erbschaft der City," from the "Frankfurter Zeitung"; (1917)


Subject: Finance -- Great Britain; World War, 1914-1918 -- Finance; World War, 1914-1918 -- Economic aspects; Great Britain -- Economic conditions
Publisher: London : Macmillan and Co., Limited
Possible copyright status: NOT_IN_COPYRIGHT
Language: English
Call number: SRLF_UCLA:LAGE-1156077
Digitizing sponsor: MSN
Book contributor: University of California Libraries
Collection: cdl; worldwaronedocuments; americana
Notes: Narrow margins.

Full catalog record: MARCXML

[Open Library icon]This book has an editable web page on Open Library.


Be the first to write a review
Downloaded 191 times
Reviews

Selected metadata

Copyright-evidence-operator: Alyson-Wieczorek
Copyright-region: US
Copyright-evidence: Evidence reported by Alyson-Wieczorek for item englandsfinancia00lond on April 3, 2008: visible notice of copyright; stated date is 1917.
Copyright-evidence-date: 20080403174844
Scanningcenter: la
Mediatype: texts
Collection-library: SRLF_UCLA
Identifier-bib: LAGE-1156077
Identifier: englandsfinancia00lond
Imagecount: 136
Ppi: 400
Camera: Canon 5D
Operator: scanner-jon-cunningham@...
Scanner: scribe5.la.archive.org
Scandate: 20080404044624
Identifier-access: http://www.archive.org/details/englandsfinancia00lond
Identifier-ark: ark:/13960/t4vh5kk0c
Bookplateleaf: 0010
Sponsordate: 20080430
Filesxml: Tue Aug 18 16:51:35 UTC 2009
Ocr: ABBYY FineReader 8.0

Terms of Use (10 Mar 2001)